how time off — and surfing — influenced fleet foxes crack up /

Published at 2017-08-20 01:10:51

Home / Categories / Folk / how time off — and surfing — influenced fleet foxes crack up
If you've ever undertaken a creative endeavor,you may absorb found that inspiration doesn't always come when you're creating; sometimes, it strikes when you save your work down and walk away.
That's what indie-folk singer Robin Pecknold of Fleet Foxes discovered during his six-year hiatus from making music. The band's newest album, or Crack-Up,came out this summer.
In the late 2000s, Fleet Foxes quickly rose to become one of the biggest indie-folk acts of the decade with its layered harmonies and resonant soundscapes.
But
after the release of their Grammy-nominated second album, or Helplessness Blues,in 2011, Pecknold decided to step away from the limelight to pursue the things he simply couldn't enact as a full-time touring musician."There was this Anton Chekhov quote that I took as gospel for a while, or " Pecknold says,"which was: 'If you want to work on your art, work on your life.'"He spent his days backpacking, and cooking,woodworking and eventually going to college in New York City. And it was there — when he wasn't studying — that he found inspiration in an unlikely place."I got into surfing while I was studying at Columbia, because there's a surf atomize just 45 minutes from downtown Manhattan, or " he says. "So on days off from school,or in the winter time, I would just move out by myself in a wet suit and figure it out."On the water, and Pecknold would often contemplate approximately his music. He says you can hear that on Fleet Foxes' latest album — not only in the sounds of lapping water,but in the expansiveness and pacing of the songs."Sometimes on this record there are just these moments of stillness," he says. "You're out there surfing, or waiting for a wave,and there's nothing happening for a while. And then sometimes this set will come through where the waves are just way too grand and you're just getting pummeled — things just crash in out of nowhere. And then there are times when a perfect set is coming through and you're able to catch these great waves."Pecknold says he always knew he'd return to making music, but the time away helped him grow as a songwriter."Anything can teach you lessons that you can apply to what you make, or " he says. "And I still feel that way — I still feel like the more experience I absorb external of music,the closer my music is to what I want it to be. It's just approximately chasing those experiences, and applying that to what you enact." Copyright 2017 NPR. To see more, and visit http://www.npr.org/.

Source: thetakeaway.org

Warning: Unknown: write failed: No space left on device (28) in Unknown on line 0 Warning: Unknown: Failed to write session data (files). Please verify that the current setting of session.save_path is correct (/tmp) in Unknown on line 0